- Encompass petroleum import and distribution via 99 gas stations, beverage production exporting to 13 countries, telecom with 20% mobile market share, GS25 retail expansion to 250 stores, and tech ventures like Mongolia’s largest data centre.
- Includes digital transformation through AI-driven platforms and sustainable investments, employing 7,800 staff across 21 provinces with annual revenues exceeding 2 trillion MNT, partnering with global giants like Hyundai and Heineken.
The evolution of Shunkhlai Group
Shunkhlai Group, one of Mongolia’s earliest private enterprises, began in 1993 with a small car warranty repair service employing seven people. Headquartered in Ulaanbaatar, it has since diversified into a holding company overseeing more than 30 subsidiaries across eight sectors: petroleum, beverages, telecom and media, retail, automotive, logistics, financial services, and technology. Key arms include Shunkhlai LLC for fuel distribution, APU JSC for dairy and alcohol exports, Skytel LLC for mobile and IPTV services, Digital Concept for GS25 convenience stores, and recent technology entrants like S Systems LLC and Zero Technology LLC. With operations in all 21 provinces and collaborations with over 10,000 suppliers, the group contributes significantly to national development, paying taxes exceeding 150 billion MNT annually. Its core values—integrity, accountability, leadership, innovation, and sustainability—guide a mission to enhance economic opportunities and foster a prosperous future.
Shunkhlai Group’s milestones reflect adaptive growth: entering wholesale petroleum in 1996, acquiring APU JSC in 2001, launching NTV television in 2006, and securing Hyundai and Kia distribution rights in 2011. By 2012, Suntrans Logistics handled 30,000 tons of cargo yearly, while 2020 saw a joint venture with GS Retail for GS25 stores, now at 250 branches aiming for 700. In technology, 2022’s S Systems built Mongolia’s largest data centre for cloud scalability, and 2023’s Zero Technology advanced software for digital transitions. As P. Batsaikhan, Chairman and President, noted in a 2013 interview: “Foreign investors mainly view Mongolia as a destination for mining-related investment. The advantage of mining revenues is they will always end up boosting the consumer goods sector.” This forward-thinking ethos has positioned Shunkhlai as a second-largest conglomerate, with GSB Capital managing 179 billion MNT in assets.
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Addresses industry challenges and innovations
Mongolia’s diversified conglomerate sector, buoyed by mining but vulnerable to commodity fluctuations, grapples with profound challenges: skilled labour shortages, funding gaps for startups, and climate impacts like harsh winters disrupting dairy production—where only 10% of 800 million litres of annual raw milk is processed, forcing imports. Geopolitical tensions and cyber threats further strain hybrid IT environments, with breaches risking operational downtime in remote provinces.
Yet, innovations surge: digital transformation via AI and automation optimises supply chains, as seen in Shunkhlai’s automated petroleum loading and Splunk-powered security, accelerating incident response threefold and halving downtime. Blockchain and IoT enhance logistics transparency, while ADB-EBRD partnerships with APU Dairy establish 25 milk collection centres to bolster herder livelihoods and food security. Shunkhlai exemplifies this, with Zero Technology’s platforms supporting cross-industry digitisation and S Systems’ data centre enabling scalable cloud services.
In a market projected to double domestic consumption by 2026, Shunkhlai’s investments in green tech and fintech underscore resilience, blending tradition with modernity to navigate Mongolia’s economic frontier.

